Supreme Court of Canada
Mapa et al. v. North York (Township) et al., [1967]
S.C.R. 172
Date: 1967-02-07
Kalmen Mapa and
Isadore Goldist (Applicants) Appellants;
and
The Municipal
Corporation of the Township of
North York and S.G. Beckett, Building Commissioner (Respondents)
Respondents.
1966: June 23; 1967: February 7.
Present: Taschereau C.J. and Martland,
Judson, Hall and Spence JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Municipal corporations—Application for
separate building permits for foundation and superstructure of apartment
hotel—Permit issued for foundation—Subsequent passage of amendment to zoning
by-law to prevent construction of apartment hotels in area—Whether building
plans approved by inspector prior to passage of amending by-law—The Planning
Act, R.S.O. 1960, c. 296, s. 30(7)(b).
The appellants were builders who intended to
build an apartment hotel on a lot which they purchased, conditional upon their
ability to obtain a building permit. Later, having been informed by the
respondent municipality that a permit would be issued, they waived the
condition and became bound to purchase the land. On March 2, 1964, they applied
for two permits, one for the foundation and one for the superstructure. This
was in accordance with the established practice which allowed the applicant to
commence work sooner and avoided the delay which would ensue if all plans and
drawings had to be examined in complete detail before work could commence. The
deficiencies, if any, with relation to the superstructure would normally be
worked out between the parties as the work progressed.
A permit for the foundations was issued on April 2, 1964, and as a result the appellants
entered into construction contracts. An endorsement on the plans indicated that
they were approved on or about March 18, 1964. On April 6, 1964, the township passed an
amending zoning by-law, the object of which was to prevent the appellants and
others from building apartment hotels on sites already chosen by them.
An application for mandamus to compel the
issue of the building permit was dismissed as to the permit for the
superstructure. On consent of the parties, the judge who heard the application
was asked to enlarge it to include a prayer for a declaration that the plans
for the building had been approved by the building inspector prior to the date
of the passing of the amending by-law and that the plans were therefore
approved within the meaning of s. 30(7)(b) of The
Planning Act, R.S.O. 1960, c. 296. This declaration was granted.
The Court of Appeal allowed the appeal of the
municipality and held that the proposed building was not an apartment hotel
within the meaning of that term as denned in the zoning by-law prior to its
amendment, and that consequently, its erection was prohibited by the provisions
of the by-law even before amendment. On appeal to this Court, the appellants
sought restoration of the declaratory judgment given by the trial judge.
[Page 173]
Held (Martland
and Hall JJ. dissenting): The appeal should be allowed.
Per Taschereau
C.J. and Judson and Spence JJ.: The application for the building permit was in
conformity with the by-law prior to its amendment.
As submitted by the appellants, the approval
contemplated by s. 30(7)(b) of The Planning Act was approval with
relation to zoning questions. The plans for the proposed apartment hotel were
approved by the building inspector prior to the date of the passing of the
amending by-law. The plans were therefore approved within the meaning of s.
30(7)(b) of the Act.
Per Martland
and Hall JJ., dissenting: Approval of the plans of a building, within
the meaning of s. 30(7) of The Planning Act, meant that kind of approval
by the building inspector which would be requisite for the issuance of a
building permit. No such approval was ever given in this case, nor were the
appellants ever in a position to demand that it be given.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario, allowing an appeal
from a judgment of Brooke J. Appeal allowed, Martland and Hall JJ. dissenting.
B.J. MacKinnon, Q.C., and J.E. Sexton,
for the appellants.
J.T. Weir, Q.C., and M. McQuaid, for the
respondents.
The judgment of Taschereau C.J. and Judson and
Spence JJ. was delivered by
JUDSON J.:—The appellants are builders who
intended to build an apartment hotel on a lot which they purchased for
$199,500, conditional upon their ability to obtain a building permit. They
brought an application for mandamus to compel the issue of the permit. Brooke
J., who heard the application, dismissed it as to the permit for the superstructure
of the building. A permit had already been granted for the foundations. On
consent of the parties, the judge was asked to enlarge the application to
include a prayer for a declaration that the plans for the building had been
approved by the building inspector prior to the date of the passing of an
amending by-law No. 18758 and that the plans were therefore approved within the
meaning of s. 30(7)(b) of The Planning Act. The judge made this
declaration.
The Court of Appeal allowed the appeal of the
municipality and held that the proposed building was not an apartment hotel
within the meaning of that term as defined in the zoning by-law No. 7625, and
that consequently, its erection was prohibited by the provisions of the by-law
even
[Page 174]
as it stood before an attempted amendment which
I will deal with later.
On this appeal the appellants seek the
restoration of the declaratory judgment given by Brooke J. Mandamus has
disappeared from the litigation.
Before making the conditional contract for the
purchase of the land, the appellants had ascertained that it was zoned “General
Commercial” according to zoning bylaw No. 7625 of the municipality and that
apartment hotels were a permitted use. On March 2, 1964, they applied for
permits for the foundation and excavation and for the superstructure. They
delivered at the same time two sets of architectural and structural plans,
together with a sketch of survey. The plans were for a 231-suite apartment
hotel.
Before waiving the condition in their agreement
of purchase and thereby binding themselves to complete, the appellants, wishing
to be satisfied that a permit for the apartment hotel would be issued, made
enquiries of the municipality and were informed on the 28th and 30th days of
March, 1964, that a permit would be issued. Relying upon this information, they
immediately waived the condition and became bound to purchase the land.
The practice of applying for two permits, one
for the foundation and one for the superstructure, requires explanation. It had
become well established and was based on convenience. It allowed an applicant
to commence work sooner and avoided the delay which would ensue if all plans
and drawings had to be examined in complete detail and approved in their
entirety before work could commence. The deficiencies, if any, with relation to
the superstructure would normally be worked out between the architect and
engineer on one side and the corporation on the other as construction went
along.
On April 2, 1964, permit No. 60133 was issued to the appellants to excavate and
erect the foundation for the proposed building. The endorsement on the plans
indicated that they were approved on or about March 18, 1964. The plans, as
filed, did not offend the zoning by-law prior to its amendment. As a result of
the issue of the permit on April 2, 1964, the appellants entered into construction contracts for amounts
exceeding $350,000. They had also already entered into engineering and
architectural contracts.
[Page 175]
On April 13, 1964, the council of the respondent
instructed the building commissioner not to “process any applications for
building permits for apartment hotels which have been or may hereafter be
submitted to the Building Department”. On April 15, the building commissioner
wrote the appellants that the plans did not comply with the zoning by-law No.
7625, as amended by by-law No. 18758, which amendment was purportedly passed by
the township on April 6, 1964,
four days after the granting of the permit to the appellants. The object of the
amending by-law was to prevent the appellants and others from building
apartment hotels on sites already chosen by them.
The submission of the appellants is that they
were entitled to build a high-rise apartment hotel under by-law No. 7625. The
Court of Appeal has found that they were not so entitled for reasons that
counsel for the municipality is not prepared to support. I will set out the
relevant definitions in the zoning by-law:
“Apartment Hotel” shall mean a building or
portion of a building used mainly for the purpose of furnishing living quarters
for families by the month or more than a month, and not for any period of less
than a month, and having at least six suites of rooms for rent, and having a
restaurant or dining room, but shall not include an hotel or ordinary lodging
house.
“Dwelling Apartment House” shall mean a
building containing more than four (4) dwelling units each unit having access
only from an internal corridor system.
“Dwelling Unit” shall mean a separate set
of living quarters designed or intended for use or used by an individual or one
family alone, and which shall include at least one room and separate kitchen
and sanitary conveniences, with a private entrance from outside the building or
from a common hallway or stairway inside.
“Hotel” shall mean a building or part of a
building in which a minimum of six rooms is provided for renting as dwellings,
usually on a temporary or transient basis, with no facilities for cooking or
housekeeping therein; but with a public dining room.
The ratio of the Court of Appeal is that the
intended building was not an apartment hotel but a “dwelling apartment house”;
that such a building even on a site within a C1 Zone could not be erected under
by-law No. 7625 unless it conformed to the provisions applicable for a building
in an RM zone. This is expressed in the following passage from its reasons for
judgment:
Having concluded that the projected
building is a “dwelling, apartment house”, and that as such it clearly does not
conform to the
[Page 176]
provisions applicable to such a building in
a RM5 zone, its erection on a site within a C1 zone was not permissible
under By-law 7625 as it stood at the date of the application for the building
permit.
At the time of the applications for building
permits the municipal officers thought that they were in conformity with the
zoning by-law; that the proposed buildings were apartment hotels within the
terms of the by-law and that they could be built on land which was zoned
(C-1)—General Commercial Zone—as this land was. No one thought of classifying
these buildings as Dwelling Apartment Houses restricted to a height of three
stories, and counsel for the municipality, in this Court, made no attempt to
argue this. I think that it is clear that when these excavation and foundation
permits were granted, the applications were in conformity with the by-law prior
to its amendment.
The next branch of the appeal is the submission
of the appellants that their plans were approved within the meaning of that
word as found in s. 30(7)(b) of The Planning Act, R.S.O. 1960,
c. 296, prior to the passing of the amending by-law 18758. Section 30(7)(b)
of The Planning Act reads as follows:
No by-law passed under this section
applies,...
(b) to prevent the erection or use
for a purpose prohibited by the by-law of any building or structure the plans
for which have, prior to the day of the passing of the by-law, been approved by
the municipal architect or building inspector...
The appellants say that the approval
contemplated by s. 30(7)(b) is approval with relation to zoning
questions. On the other hand, the municipality says that the approval of plans
contemplated by s. 30(7)(b) is the issue of the building permit. In
other words, if a builder cannot get a mandamus for the issue of a building permit,
then he must lack the necessary approval under s. 30(7)(b). The judge
favoured the submission of the appellants. I think that he was right in making
this declaration. The building permit for the foundations and excavation was
actually issued. The plans for the superstructure were in the hands of the
municipality. The very issue of the excavation and foundation permit indicates
that whatever objections there might be to the plans of the superstructure were
of such a character, being deficiencies with respect to the building by-law
alone, that they would normally be worked out
[Page 177]
between the parties as the work progressed. I
think that these appellants had the approval of the municipality and that the
judgment of Brooke J. should be restored.
The appeal should be allowed with costs and
para. 1 of the order of Brooke J. to the following effect should be restored:
IT IS DECLARED AND FOUND that the plans as
submitted by the Applicants for the proposed apartment hotel were approved by
the Building Inspector prior to the date of the passing of the amending by-law,
being By-law 18758 of the Respondent Municipality, and that the plans were
therefore approved within the meaning of Section 30(7)(b) of the
Planning Act.
The judgment of Martland and Hall JJ. was
delivered by
MARTLAND J. (dissenting):—This case
relates to one of three applications which were disposed of at the same time by
Brooke J., each seeking an order by way of mandamus, directed to the respondent
corporation and to the respondent Beckett, its building commissioner, to issue
a building permit to permit the applicant to build an apartment hotel. The
other two applicants were Ample Investments Limited and Tashan Limited. Reasons
were delivered in respect of the application of Ample Investments Limited,
which also applied to the other two applications. Brooke J. refused to make the
order requested, but, on consent of the parties, enlarged the application to
include a prayer for a declaration that the plans for the building had been
approved by the respondent Beckett before passage of amending by‑law No.
18758. This declaration was granted. His decision was reversed on appeal. The
appeals from the judgments of the Court of Appeal for Ontario in respect of all three applications were argued at the same time
before us.
The facts are stated in the reasons of my
brother Judson. In each case the applicant had obtained a permit limited to the
excavation and erection of the foundation of a building. These were issued, in
the case of the appellants, on April 2, 1964, in the case of Tashan, on April 3, 1964, and in the case of Ample, on April
6, 1964. By-law No. 18758 was enacted on April 6, 1964, and its effect was to
prevent the construction in each case of a building of the type contemplated in
the area where it was proposed to be erected, in that, inter alia, a
limitation as to height was imposed.
[Page 178]
The respondents contend that this amending
by-law was applicable in each case. The appellants contend that it did not
apply because of the provisions of s. 30(7) of The Planning Act, R.S.O.
1960, c. 296, which provides as follows:
30. (7) No by-law passed under this section
applies,
(a) to prevent the use of any land,
building or structure for any purpose prohibited by the by-law if such land,
building or structure was lawfully used for such purpose on the day of the
passing of the by-law, so long as it continues to be used for that purpose; or
(b) to prevent the erection
or use for a purpose prohibited by the by-law of any building or structure the
plans for which have, prior to the day of the passing of the by-law, been
approved by the municipal architect or building inspector, so long as the
building or structure when erected is used and continues to be used for the
purpose for which it was erected and provided the erection of such building or
structure is commenced within two years after the day of the passing of the
by-law and such building or structure is completed within a reasonable time
after the erection thereof is commenced.
The application of that subsection depends upon
whether or not the respondent Beckett had, prior to the enactment of by-law No.
18758, approved the plans of the appellants’ proposed building.
The learned trial judge summarizes the evidence
of Beckett on this point as follows:
Mr. Beckett in his evidence stated that the
plans of the superstructure were considered prior to the issue of the permit
for excavation and foundation, but only in so far as they related to excavation
and foundation. The plans for the excavation and foundation, which are some of
the plans filed, are clearly stamped over the signature of Mr. Beckett
“approved for building permit for excavation and foundation only.” There is no
stamp of approval marked on the rest of the plans filed. As to the application
for the building permit for the superstructure, Mr. Beckett states that there
was a preliminary examination made of these plans but that they were returned
to the owner with a notice endorsed on them, “Need further lay-out plans for
superstructure permit” to advise that there were deficiencies in the documents
submitted for this purpose. It appears from the cross-examination that this
objection relates to one of the plans which is entitled a typical floor plan
and on which it is noted that on alternate floors this plan would be reversed.
For clarity, the building inspector has required a separate plan for the
alternate floors. Mr. Beckett stated that at the time of the launching of this
application further examinations were made of the plans and they revealed a
number of deficiencies, some of which were touched upon in his
cross-examination. In addition he stated, on cross‑examination, that no
specifications for the superstructure had been filed and as a result certain
aspects of the construction were not clear, e.g., while the plans called for
brick, there were no specifications as to the type of brick.
[Page 179]
The learned trial judge found that the building
plans had been examined and approved as to their compliance with the zoning
by-law No. 7625 as it then stood. He further stated that:
The plans in so far as they related to the
superstructure had received consideration and had undergone preliminary
examination prior to the issuing of the permit for excavation and foundation.
He concluded that there had been approval within
the meaning of s. 30(7) of The Planning Act.
It was contended by counsel for the appellants
that approval of the plans as to compliance with the zoning by-law was an
approval within the meaning of subs. (7). I do not accept this submission.
Paragraph (b) of the subsection refers to approval of the plans of a
building or structure. In my opinion this means the approval of the plans in
relation to the issuance of a building permit. Subsection (7) was intended to
remove from the application of a zoning by‑law a building already
constructed and in use, and a proposed building which, in the absence of the
by-law, the owner of the land was legally entitled to construct on the day the
by-law was passed. An opinion by the building inspector that a building of the
kind proposed in a set of plans would not offend an existing zoning by-law is
not an approval of the plans of the building in this context.
The requirements to be met before the approval
of plans of a building and the issuance of a building permit are described in
Chapter 1, Section 6, of By-Law No. 6110 of the respondent. It provides, in
part:
6.
DUTIES OF THE BUILDING COMMISSIONER
The Building Commissioner shall:
(a) Examine all applications
for permission to do work in connection with building;
(b) When the prescribed fee
has been paid, and the application, drawings, specifications and block plan or
survey conform to the requirements of this By-law, and all other applicable
governmental regulations, stamp the drawings and specifications with the
approval stamp of the Building Department, issue the permit together with one
set of the approved drawings and specifications to the applicant, and retain
the other set...
(c) If the matters mentioned in any
application for a permit or if the drawings, specifications or block plan or
survey submitted with the application indicate to the Building Commissioner
that the work proposed to be done will not comply in all respects with the
provisions of this By-law and all applicable governmental regulations, refuse
to issue a permit therefor and no permit shall be
[Page 180]
issued until the application, drawings,
specifications and the block plan are made to conform to the requirements of
this By-law and all applicable governmental regulations.
Section 6(b) clearly contemplates the
submission of both drawings and specifications before the drawings can be
approved, and the approval of both, at the same time, before a building permit
may be issued. The respondent Beckett, on the date of the enactment of by-law
No. 18758, had no authority to approve the building plans, because on that
date not only were there deficiencies in the plans filed, but, in addition, no
specifications had been filed.
It is clear that on that date the appellants
were not in a position to demand the issuance of a building permit because the
learned trial judge expressly refused to grant an order by way of mandamus to
require the issuance of such permit, and no appeal was taken from that
decision. He said:
Accepting the statements made by Mr.
Beckett as to the deficiencies in the material and having considered the
provisions of the building by-law, particularly as to the need for filing
specifications, I cannot in these circumstances at this time require the
respondent municipality to issue the building permit sought.
In my opinion, approval of the plans of a
building, within the meaning of s. 30(7) of The Planning Act, means that
kind of approval by the building inspector which would be requisite for the
issuance of a building permit. No such approval was ever given in this case,
nor, in view of the decision of the learned trial judge, were the appellants
ever in a position to demand that it be given.
In my opinion, therefore, the appeal should be
dismissed with costs.
Appeal allowed with costs, MARTLAND
and HALL JJ. dissenting.
Solicitors for the appellants: Wright
& McTaggart, Toronto.
Solicitors for the respondents: Arnup,
Foulds, Weir, Boeckh, Morris & Robinson, Toronto.